A Memoir
by Paul Guest
Paul Guest was twelve years old, racing down a hill on a too big, ancient bicycle, when he discovered he had no brakes. Steering into anything that would slow down the bike, he hit a ditch, was thrown over the handlebars, and broke his neck.
One More Theory About Happiness follows a boy into manhood, from the harrowing days immediately after his accident to his adult life as a teacher, award-winning poet, and soon-to-be husband. With wit, courage, and an unstoppable drive to live a life of his own creationstemming in part from his remarkable parents, who insisted he return to school only days after arriving home from the hospitalPaul makes peace with his paralysis. As he grows older, he transforms it with his art, cultivating his lifelong gift for language into a searing poetic sensibility that has earned him praise from the highest ranks of American letters (Wonderful John Ashbery; AstonishingJorie Graham; Fierce and unnervingRobert Hass).
An unforgettable storyshatteringly funny, deeply moving, and breathtakingly honest - One More Theory About Happiness takes us from a body irrevocably changed to a life fiercely cherished.
"Guest's lyrical narrative ability tempers the heft of his experience, but the tender age at which he endured this grueling ordeal resonates on every page. Inspiring and courageous." - Kirkus Reviews
"I read this book in one sitting ... Heartbreakingly funny, pitilessly honest, [this] is above all a quiet and bold and loving work of art that renders beautifully what it means to live. You must read this book." - Bret Lott, #1 New York Times bestselling author
"Sweet and beautiful and wrenching. By so generously providing a window into his own difficult experience, Guest shows us how profoundly fragile the human body truly is, how quickly our lives can be changed forever...and most importantly, how its possible to create a new definition of wholeness." - Said Sayrafiezadeh, author of When Skateboards Will Be Free
"[An] unbelievable story ... [about] an unthinkable situation, a deep level of hell, really. Guest is never self-pitying, never gets sentimental; this is not feel good tripe, or inspirational; it is deeper and more important than thatsmart and honest and clear eyed and above all, humane." - Charles Bock, bestselling author of Beautiful Children
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Paul Guest is the author of three poetry collections, The Resurrection of the Body and the Ruin of the World, which won the 2002 New Issues Prize in Poetry; Notes for My Body Double, which won the 2006 Prairie Schooner Book Prize; and My Index of Slightly Horrifying Knowledge. The recipient of a 2007 Whiting Award, he lives in Atlanta, Georgia.
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